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Access Is Opportunity: Do You Know Who’s in Your Space?
In abuse prevention, access equals opportunity. Every individual who interacts with consumers, whether it’s once for five minutes or every week for five years, has the potential to impact safety. The question is: does your organization know who those individuals are, what safeguards are in place, and where the gaps lie?
Too often, organizations focus their abuse prevention efforts solely on employees and high-access volunteers. But in reality, consumers come into contact with a much broader range of individuals when they are in your spaces and programs, many of whom may fall outside your organization’s formal safeguards. They can include:
- One-time volunteers helping at a weekend carnival or fundraising event
- Third-party vendors like IT technicians or food service teams
- Contractors providing tutoring, therapy, or coaching
- Emergency repair crews called to fix a roof leak or burst pipe during program hours.
When it comes to sexual abuse prevention, access isn’t just a staffing issue. It is a systems issue. And systems must be built to account for both planned and unplanned access.
As highlighted in the 2025 Praesidium Report, “access extends beyond physical proximity. It includes the level of trust, visibility, frequency, and duration of interaction, as well as the clarity of role and authority.” That means someone can pose a risk even if they are never left fully alone with a youth or vulnerable adult. Risk lives in the gray areas: a contractor alone in a hallway, a one-time volunteer chaperoning a trip, or a janitor who’s on-site after hours, but still interacts with consumers.
Unfortunately, organizations’ existing processes often break down when it comes to external, informal, or infrequent access points. These are the roles where expectations are often unclear, onboarding is skipped, and no one is quite sure who’s responsible for oversight.
A Challenge to Reframe Access
Access isn’t always the result of intentional planning. It often comes from inherited or long-standing relationships. Many organizations grant access to individuals or partner groups they’ve worked with for years: a neighborhood clinic that uses your gym, a staffing agency that sends temporary workers, a church group that holds weekly events in your space. These partnerships often began before the organization formalized or streamlined its abuse prevention protocols and rely on loose “handshake” agreements that lack clear guardrails.
But even trusted relationships deserve a second look. As abuse prevention practices evolve, it is essential to re-evaluate access agreements, vendor relationships, and informal arrangements through a prevention lens. Who has unsupervised or unrestricted access? Are they screened, trained, and monitored? Do they understand your policies, or are you relying on good faith and assumed habits?
Asking better questions can shift your organization from a reactive stance to a proactive one:
- Who has access to your consumers, including staff, volunteers, contractors, vendors, parents, and partner organizations?
- What expectations have you clearly communicated and are those expectations documented, enforced, and equitable across roles?
- Which parts of the Safety Equation are in place, and where are you relying too heavily on just one layer, like monitoring?
Even when you cannot reasonably screen or train every single individual who enters your space, you can still reduce risk by setting access limits, increasing supervision, clarifying roles, and outlining written requirements for external contacts.
Beyond Compliance, Toward Accountability
Early warning signs of potential abuse are more likely to occur in organizations where access protocols are inconsistent or unclear. These violations frequently involve people who fall outside of traditional supervision structures: visiting youth leaders from another organization, parents allowed to move freely through program areas, or service vendors whose background checks and training were assumed but never confirmed.
At Praesidium, we’ve seen firsthand how easily abuse prevention systems can erode when external access points are left unmanaged. Clear policy is critical, but policy must be backed by operational accountability and thoughtful design.
Where to Start?
To help organizations identify and address access-related risk, we have created a free downloadable Access Mapping Worksheet. This tool can be used in team meetings, risk management reviews, or accreditation prep to:
- Understand and catalog who has access to your consumers, including individuals and organizations.
- Document where and when that access occurs, even if it’s rare or unplanned.
- Evaluate which parts of the Safety Equation are in place.
- Identify the biggest gaps and assign a risk level to each access point
Taking time to map access across your organization helps uncover overlooked risks and creates a shared understanding of where safety systems need to improve.
We Can Help
Praesidium works with thousands of organizations to create abuse prevention systems that account for the full range of people who come into contact with children, youth, and vulnerable adults. Whether you need to evaluate external partnerships, improve access policies, or implement new onboarding protocols for volunteers and vendors, we are here to help.
DOWNLOAD THE ACCESS MAPPING WORKSHEET